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 National Drug and Alcohol Facts Week 2021
March 25, 2021

National Drug and Alcohol Facts Week 2021

National Drug and Alcohol Facts Week (March 22-28,2021) is an annual, week-long health observance that aims to inspire dialogue about the science of drug use and awareness of addiction among youth. This is the 11th year the National Institutes of Drug Abuse, which is a federal agency serving as part of the National Institutes of Health, has sparked conversations for this observance.

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 COVID Fatigue? Learn How to Manage the Effects
March 16, 2021

COVID Fatigue? Learn How to Manage the Effects

For more than a year now, the COVID-19 pandemic has affected almost every area of daily life. Masking, social distancing, vaccine distribution, and other issues have led to what many health care experts call “COVID fatigue”.

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 UAB Callahan Elevator Project

UAB Callahan Elevator Project

At UAB Callahan Eye Hospital & Clinics, we are dedicated to providing excellent patient care to everyone who comes through our doors. To help deliver a better patient experience, we are upgrading our elevators near the parking deck.

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 Pandemic Response Helps UAB Earn No. 1 Spot on Forbes List of Best Large Employers
February 15, 2021

Pandemic Response Helps UAB Earn No. 1 Spot on Forbes List of Best Large Employers

We can all agree that 2020 was a difficult year, especially for hospitals and health care workers. But UAB Medicine rose to the COVID-19 challenge, helping UAB earn the No. 1 spot on Forbes magazine’s national list of Best Large Employers for 2021.

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 From Medellín to Medicine: Optometrist Marcela Frazier Built a Practice that Honors Her Heritage
February 10, 2021

From Medellín to Medicine: Optometrist Marcela Frazier Built a Practice that Honors Her Heritage

During her nearly two decades in Birmingham, UAB Callahan Eye Hospital and Clinics pediatric optometrist Marcela Herrera Frazier, OD, MSPH, has built a successful vision practice and touched the lives of countless children – especially in the local Hispanic community. A Colombian native, she’s earned the trust of the parents and patients alike, and today about 30% of them share her heritage.

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 Callahan Trussville Q&A
February 8, 2021

Callahan Trussville Q&A

We know you’d go to the ends of the Earth to get the most advanced eye care for your family, but UAB Callahan Eye Hospital & Clinics made sure you don’t have to.

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 Can you get COVID-19 from using cash or change when purchasing items?
January 22, 2021

Can you get COVID-19 from using cash or change when purchasing items?

COVID-19 is primarily spread person to person via respiratory droplets or small particles, like aerosols. If infectious respiratory droplets land on objects (such as cash or change), and someone touches the object and then touches his/her mouth, eyes or nose, then he/she may get COVID-19. In general, it is important to maintain excellent hand hygiene, especially after touching commonly used items, such as money.

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 Does zinc help fight COVID-19?

Does zinc help fight COVID-19?

Studies are ongoing to determine whether nutritional supplements such as zinc have an effect on people with COVID-19.

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 How long does COVID last on wood?

How long does COVID last on wood?

According to a study published in The Lancet Microbe, under various environmental conditions, no infectious COVID-19 virus could be found on treated wood after two days.

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 How long should you quarantine if you are asymptomatic but tested positive for COVID-19?

How long should you quarantine if you are asymptomatic but tested positive for COVID-19?

According to the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC), if you test positive for COVID-19 but do not have symptoms or ever develop symptoms, then in most cases you should isolate for 10 days from the date of the positive test.

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 Is it safe to spend time with someone who previously tested positive for COVID-19 if they are no longer symptomatic?

Is it safe to spend time with someone who previously tested positive for COVID-19 if they are no longer symptomatic?

According to the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC), in general, if someone tested positive for COVID-19 and had symptoms, then he/she can be around others once 10 days have passed since symptoms began, and he/she is without fever for 24 hours (without using fever-reducing medications), and any other COVID-19 symptoms are improving. These recommendations do not apply to those who have a severe case of COVID-19 nor to people who are immunocompromised.

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 When can you expect the worst of COVID-19 symptoms after you test positive?

When can you expect the worst of COVID-19 symptoms after you test positive?

People with COVID-19 may be asymptomatic or have symptoms that range from mild to severe. It is difficult to predict when a person may experience the most severe symptoms after a positive test.

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